Gianfranco Funari
{{Short description|Italian pundit and television presenter (1932–2008)}}
{{Expand Italian|topic=bio|Gianfranco Funari|date=July 2023}}
{{Infobox person
| name = Gianfranco Funari
| image = Gianfranco Funari.jpg
| caption = Gianfranco Funari in Radiocorriere magazine, 1972
| birth_name =
| birth_date = {{Birth-date|21 March 1932}}
| birth_place = Rome, Italy
| death_date = {{Death-date and age| 12 July 2008|21 March 1932}}
| death_place = Milan, Italy
| height = {{convert|1.73|m|ftin|abbr=on}}
| occupation = {{flatlist|
- Presenter
- writer
- actor
}}
}}
Gianfranco Funari (21 March 1932 – 12 July 2008) was an Italian television host, writer, stand-up comedian and actor.
Biography
Funari was born in Rome, where his father was a coachman. After working as a croupier in casinos in Hong Kong and Saint Vincent, he was introduced to stand-up comedy by actor Oreste Lionello, who had spotted him doing an amateur performance in a Roman nightclub. Funari then specialized in satirical monologues, and in 1970 he made his television debut in the RAI variety show La domenica è un'altra cosa.{{cite news|last1=Alessandra Vitali|title=E' morto Gianfranco Funari addio al "cattivo presentatore"|url=http://www.repubblica.it/2008/07/sezioni/persone/gianfranco-funari/gianfranco-funari/gianfranco-funari.html|accessdate=14 September 2016|work=La Repubblica|date=12 July 2008}}
In 1980 Funari debuted as TV host and writer with the Telemontecarlo program Torti in faccia. In 1981 he created the successful political talk show Aboccaperta, which was first broadcast on Telemontecarlo and from 1984 to 1987 on Rai 2. Other television shows he wrote and hosted also include Mezzogiorno è (Rai 2, 1987–90), Mezzogiorno italiano (Italia 1, 1991), Zona Franca (a TV show he hosted on a network on 75 local TV station following a series of disagreements over his political freedom with Mediaset, 1992);{{Cite web|url=https://massimoemanuelli.com/2018/04/16/gianfranco-funari/|title = Gianfranco Funari|date = 16 April 2018}} Funari news (Rete 4, 1993-4), Napoli capitale (Rai 2, 1995-6), A tu per tu (Canale 5, 2000) and the Saturday night show Apocalypse Show (Rai 1, 2007).Aldo Grasso, Massimo Scaglioni. Enciclopedia della Televisione. Garzanti, Milano, 1996 – 2003. {{ISBN|881150466X}}. pp.279-80.
In 1994 Funari was invited to edit the newspaper {{Interlanguage link multi|L'Indipendente|it|3=L'Indipendente (Milano)}} where he also worked as a columnist. He was also a television critic for the magazine Il Borghese.
Funari died on July 12, 2008, at the San Raffaele Hospital in Milan, where he was hospitalized for five months for lung and heart problems.
Bibliography
- Gianfranco Funari. Il potere in mutande: il dito nell'occhio della TV italiana, Rizzoli, 2009. {{ISBN|8817032905}}.
- Massimo Emanuelli. Gianfranco Funari. Il "giornalaio" più famoso d'Italia, Greco & Greco, 2009. {{ISBN|9788879804684}}.
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
{{Commons category}}
- {{IMDb name}}
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Funari, Gianfranco}}
Category:Mass media people from Rome
Category:Italian television presenters
Category:Italian stand-up comedians
Category:Italian male comedians
Category:Italian male film actors
Category:Italian television writers
Category:Italian newspaper editors
Category:Italian male journalists
Category:20th-century Italian comedians
Category:Italian male television writers
Category:20th-century Italian journalists
Category:20th-century Italian screenwriters
Category:20th-century Italian male writers
Category:Deaths from lung disease